Rating: 88% | ★★★★
Synopsis (from NetGalley): Grey Brooks is on a mission to keep her career afloat now that the end of her long-running teen TV show has her (unsuccessfully) pounding the pavement again. With a life-changing role on the line, she’s finally desperate enough to agree to her publicist’s scheme: fake a love affair with a disgraced Hollywood heartthrob who needs the publicity, but for very different reasons. Ethan Atkins just wants to be left alone. Between his high-profile divorce, struggles with drinking, and grief over the death of his longtime creative partner and best friend, Ethan has slowly let himself fade into the background. But if he ever wants to produce the last movie he and his partner wrote together, Ethan needs to clean up his reputation and step back into the spotlight. A gossip-inducing affair with a gorgeous actress might be just the ticket, even if it’s the last thing he wants to do. Though their juicy public relationship is less than perfect behind the scenes, it doesn’t take long before Grey and Ethan’s sizzling chemistry starts to feel like more than just an act. But after decades in a ruthless industry that requires bulletproof emotional armor to survive, are they too used to faking it to open themselves up to the real thing? Non-Spoiler Review: Ava Wilder's How to Fake It in Hollywood is a realist look at celebrity culture. While the situations in which the protagonists, Grey and Ethan, find themselves, can teeter on the edge of cliché, Wilder manages to subvert readers' expectations and present an earnest portrait of addiction and love. The pacing of the novel is fairly consistent, with a slight imbalance in the third act and a bit of a lull when characters walk back and forth on the same issue. The writing is also solid, if a little overly straightforward in certain areas; I particularly enjoyed Wilder's tongue-in-cheek dig at a certain small-town, absolutely bonkers teen drama featuring the epic highs and lows of high school football. (Or, theoretically, if such a bonkers teen drama could exist and be nonsensically renewed for years on end. Theoretically.) The stars of the novel, fittingly, are Grey and Ethan. Grey is especially three-dimensional and realistic, and her choices and internal monologue emphasize—cleverly subtle on Wilder's part—not only her youth but also her position as a woman in the entertainment business. Ethan's struggles are also crucial to the story, but I found that they became secondary (fittingly, in my opinion) to Grey's stronger character arc. While How to Fake It in Hollywood is, perhaps, at its core, a romance story, it is also a deeply realistic and truth-adjacent novel. There is an eerie familiarity to it because the reader will have likely read this story dozens of times before—in tabloid headlines jeering at celebrities gone wild, in TV recaps of celebrity divorce scandals, and in thousands of Instagram posts obsessively analyzing celebrities' bodies. Wilder uses her readers' muscle memories of celebrity intrusions and offers a glimpse into the private actions behind the public speculations. Thank you to NetGalley and Random House - Ballantine for a copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review. How to Fake It in Hollywood is out June 14, 2022.
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